Sekėjai

Ieškoti šiame dienoraštyje

2023 m. balandžio 15 d., šeštadienis

How to survive a superpower split

"Caught between America, China and Russia, many countries are determined not to pick sides. As the American-led order in place since 1945 fragments and economic decoupling accelerates, they seek deals across divides. This transactional approach is reshaping geopolitics.

One way of capturing the sheer scale and heft of these non-aligned powers is through a Russian lens. Our sister organisation, eiu, has analysed countries based on their economic and military ties to Moscow, their diplomatic stances including votes at the un and whether they support and implement sanctions. 

Although 52 countries comprising 15% of the global population—the West and its friends—lambast and punish Russia's actions, and just 12 countries laud Russia, some 127 states are categorised as not being clearly in either camp.

To get a handle on what non-alignment really means The Economist has also looked at a narrower panel of the 25 biggest economies that have sat on the fence on the Ukraine conflict, or wish to remain non-aligned in the Sino-American confrontation, or both. The members of this group—call them the transactional 25 (t25)—are hugely varied in terms of wealth and political systems, and include giant India and tiny Qatar. Yet they have some common ground. They are brutally pragmatic and have collectively become more powerful. 

Today they represent 45% of the world's population and their share of global gdp has risen from 11% in 1992 to 18% in 2023, more than the eu's. 

Their strategy of neutrality involves big risks and opportunities. Whether they succeed will influence the world order for decades. And needless to say, both America and China will work to win them over.

In the 20th century non-alignment meant different things to different countries at different times. At conferences in Bandung, Indonesia in 1955 and Belgrade, Yugoslavia in 1961, leaders presented a "third world" apart from the West and the Soviet bloc. From the late 1960s these countries increasingly focused on economic inequality between the "global south" (a less loaded term for the third world) and the industrial north. A formal institution, the Non-Aligned Movement, was joined by nearly every African, Asian and Latin American state. With the end of the cold war it became, in the words of an Indian academic, "a moribund organisation in need of a decent burial".

Today, non-aligned countries are not defined by their membership of an institution, but rather by their characteristics and behaviour. These middle powers are pragmatic and opportunistic. In a recent book Jorge Heine, a former Chilean diplomat, contends that in the 20th century countries often passively drifted into one or other of the superpowers' orbits. Today there is more "active" evaluation of the best means to achieve particular ends, he says. Some call it "minilateralism" (as opposed to multilateralism)—the targeted use of discrete alliances or groupings, rather than lumping your lot in with one bloc.

Non-aligned countries also usually think Western leaders are hypocrites. Some $170bn in aid was pledged to Ukraine in the first year of the conflict—equivalent to about 90% of spending on all global aid in 2021 by the oecd's Development Assistance Committee, a group of 31 Western donors. To the West, such generosity shows solidarity with a fellow democracy; to others it shows that rich countries cough up if it serves their interests. "Europe has to grow out of the mindset that Europe's problems are the world's problems, but the world's problems are not Europe's problems," declared Subrahmanyam Jaishankar, India's foreign minister, last year.

Such stances are broadly in line with public opinion. A report by Cambridge University last year found that in liberal democracies 75% hold a negative view of China, and 87% do of Russia. But the picture is almost the reverse among the 6bn people who live elsewhere. 

A gap is opening up between how the West sees the world and how the rest sees it. In a poll published earlier this year by the European Council on Foreign Relations, a think-tank, a plurality of Indians (48%) and most Turks (51%) said the future world order will be defined by multipolarity or non-Western dominance. Just 37% of Americans, 31% of people in eu states and 29% of Britons agreed. The West thinks it is watching a sequel of the cold war; the rest of the world sees an entirely new film.

Wheeling and dealing

So who makes up the t25? The diverse group encompasses some of the world's most populous countries and two of its largest democracies, India and Indonesia, alongside Vietnam, Saudi Arabia and Egypt, which are all run by autocrats of various flavours. Large wealth disparities exist, too. In Saudi Arabia gdp per person is more than $27,000, on a par with some European countries, while in Pakistan it still lingers around just $1,600.

As globalisation has spread, the trade pattern of the t25 has become multipolar. Some 43% of merchandise trade is with the Western bloc, 19% with the China-Russia bloc and 30% with countries in neither of those camps (see chart). Perhaps unsurprisingly given its location, 77% of Mexico's total trade occurs with the West; over 60% of Israel's and Algeria's trade also does. More than a third of Chile's is with China, a higher share than any other t25 country (but 40% of its trade involves the West). More than half of Argentina's trade, and almost half of India's, is with other non-aligned countries.

Arms imports also show a complex mesh of loyalties. India hedges its bets. Between 2018 and 2022 its main supplier was Russia, which provided 45% of its arms, but it got another 29% from Europe and is likely to seek more self-reliance, with help from America. India's rival China, which supplies its arch-enemy, Pakistan, is out of the question. Israel, Morocco, Saudi Arabia and South Africa look instead to America for the vast majority of their arms imports.

There is no coherent governing body that represents non-aligned countries and their interests. None is expected to emerge. Instead a variety of disparate organisations, such as the g20, provide platforms of varying effectiveness for the major non-aligned countries. The brics group of countries—Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa—is a forum for middle powers that wants to expand: it is discussing whether to let Iran and Saudi Arabia join. At un climate talks a broader group of more than 130 countries, including China, has negotiated together.

Despite their differences, the non-aligned countries share a common aim: to make expedient deals in a fluid environment. For two decades many were able to simultaneously build relations with the West, China and Russia. No longer. The West is imposing sanctions on Russia and restricting Chinese access to technology.

For many this is a grave threat. Sanctions on Russia saw energy and food prices soar globally, prompting a backlash across the non-Western world. 

More recently Janet Yellen, America's treasury secretary, has encouraged American companies to move their supply chains into friendly states. Investment shifts are under way (see chart). Beijing and Moscow, meanwhile, are drawing closer together. New research by the imf notes that since 2018 geopolitical alignment, measured by similarity in un voting patterns, has become ever more important in determining the location of foreign direct investment. Under the imf's scenarios for fractured trade, the impact in emerging markets could be more than twice as bad as in advanced ones.

But many in the non-aligned world bet that they can win from economic decoupling and political fragmentation, by hedging their relations between the big powers and by influencing other countries themselves. To understand this transactional strategy, look at the approach of some of the big countries caught in the middle. Brazil is a good case study. It opposes what Mauro Vieira, foreign minister, calls "automatic alignments". Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, who began his second stint as Brazil's president in January, sees President Joe Biden as an ally on climate change; at their meeting in Washington, dc, in February they re-established joint environmental institutions abandoned under Jair Bolsonaro, Lula's predecessor. America classes Brazil as a "major non-nato ally", a legal status that entitles enhanced co-operation with America's armed forces.

Yet Brazil is also hedging between the superpowers. Like others in its region, it has declined Western proposals to give old Russian-made equipment to Ukraine in exchange for new arms. Lula's arrival in Beijing on April 14th will underscore China's economic importance. Trade between Brazil and China was nearly $153bn in 2022, a 37-fold increase in two decades. Partly this reflects how Brazil took advantage of tit-for-tat us-China tariffs to increase agricultural exports to China at America's expense.

Brazil is also making forays of its own. Lula will soon visit Africa to revive Brazil's influence there. During his first stint in office, trade with Africa rose from $6bn in 2003 to $25.6bn in 2012, and South Africa was welcomed into the brics bloc. Then Lula's predecessor made no visits to Africa. Lula evidently thinks it worthwhile to renew the effort.

India's fear of China has pushed it closer to the West in some respects. In March the prime minister of Japan, which like India, America and Australia, belongs to the "Quad", an Indo-Pacific security forum, visited Delhi in a landmark visit. In the 2021-22 financial year India's trade with America overtook that with China. Yet India still purchases weapons and cheap oil from Russia and is unlikely to break its longstanding ties unless Vladimir Putin's regime were to use nuclear weapons.

Practical, not partisan

Like Brazil, India is asserting itself more abroad: only China imports and exports more with sub-Saharan Africa. The average annual stock of fdi from India was $0.8bn in 2004 to 2008 (less than half of Sweden's) but $31bn a decade later (more than Germany's and Japan's combined). Last month India hosted representatives from 31 African countries for war games. India promises to use its chair of the g20 this year to be the "voice of the global south".

Turkey also wants more clout across the global south. It has security agreements with 30 African states and its defence exports to Africa rose more than five-fold from 2020 to 2021. Advisers to Turkey's president say the "New Turkey" can select its partners. That may explain its ostensible neutrality over the conflict in Ukraine, which Turkey has used to leverage its ties to Russia. Turkish exports to Russia reached $7.6bn in 2022, a 45% increase on the previous year.

Saudi Arabia is reducing its reliance on its historical ally, America, by tilting towards China, which is now the kingdom's largest trading partner. Consider decisions this month and in October by the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, which Saudi Arabia dominates, to slash oil production. Last month Saudi Arabia signed a Chinese-brokered deal with Iran and joined the Shanghai Co-operation Organisation, a Eurasian talking shop. China says it wants to establish a free-trade deal with the Gulf "as soon as possible".

Gulf countries' relations with Africa were once confined to energy, agriculture and the politics of the Horn of Africa. Today Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates hunt for minerals deals; dp World, a Dubai-based ports operator, is emerging as a critical logistics firm on the continent; and Qatar is playing novel diplomatic roles. Last month it was involved in brokering the release of Paul Rusesabagina, a jailed Rwandan dissident (and the inspiration for the film "Hotel Rwanda").

African countries have long looked to both superpowers. The West has generally been their preferred source of "software": support for schooling, health and, should a government want it, human rights. China offers "hardware": bridges, roads, ports—and the loans to build them. Between 2007 and 2020 America's main development agency lent less than a tenth of the total of China's two major development banks ($1.9bn v $23bn) for sub-Saharan African infrastructure projects.

In some parts of Africa the West's promises to ensure security have rarely seemed as hollow. "Americans need somewhere for their troops and agents to sleep. But the security relationship does nothing for development," explains a former adviser to an African president. "That's why we need China." In August the last French troops left Mali after a nine-year deployment; the Wagner Group, comprising Russian mercenaries, now helps prop up the ruling junta.

The non-aligned countries want to avoid taking sides. But the big powers, America and China, are keen to draw them into their orbit. Beijing sees asserting leadership of the global south as a way of bolstering its resistance to American pressure. It positions itself as a model for others within a broad family of developing countries. It draws a contrast with the West, which it says prefers smaller clubs (like the g7). "China shows up where and when the West will not," says Yemi Osinbajo, Nigeria's outgoing vice-president.

Eastern friends, western pals

China is the main trading partner of around 120 countries and the lender of first and last resort for many. Between 2007 and 2020 it provided more infrastructure financing in sub-Saharan Africa than the next eight lenders combined. It will be pivotal to resolving sovereign-debt crises. Analysis of 73 developing countries by the imf notes that in 2006 China held just 2% of this group's external debts, with the mostly Western "Paris club" group of creditors accounting for 28%. By 2020 the respective shares were 18% and 10%.

Those in the West have reason to roll their eyes. China's "win-win" rhetoric masks its ruthlessness. "Banking on Beijing" (2022), by Bradley Parks of AidData, a research outfit, and co-authors, shows how China uses its economic tools for political ends. It often skews its funding towards incumbent leaders' home districts—and is more likely than the West to lend to corrupt and autocratic countries. AidData also finds that a 10% increase in voting similarity with Beijing at the un is associated with an increase in Chinese projects in that country. Chinese loans come with unusually strict clauses on confidentiality and collateral. But Chinese development projects are associated with boosts to gdp per person, notes Mr Parks.

In the face of China's efforts, America and its allies are trying to recalibrate their message to the non-aligned world. America understands that other countries' consent bestows legitimacy on the international order it leads. "Countries don't want to choose, and we don't want them to," Jake Sullivan, Mr Biden's national security adviser, told the Washington Post earlier this year. America is pursuing diplomacy in places it has neglected. Kamala Harris, America's vice-president, Ms Yellen and Antony Blinken, its secretary of state, have all visited Africa in 2023. Mr Biden will soon follow.

America has also bolstered security partnerships with influential non-aligned countries. In November Lloyd Austin, its defence secretary, met his Indonesian counterpart for the fourth time; in January American and Indian officials agreed to deepen co-operation on cutting-edge defence technologies. In total America maintains 88 defence "partnerships" (excluding formal alliances such as its one with nato), though some are limited in scope.

Though America and the eu have in recent years launched rival schemes to the bri, the perception remains that, if you want infrastructure that can help transform your economy, your first call is to Beijing. After Ms Harris released a soundtrack featuring African artists to accompany her recent visit to the continent, one senior African official noted, dryly, that Chinese visitors bring loans and engineers while Americans bring playlists.

A political paradox

The Biden administration is widely seen as embracing a two-tier foreign policy: first come relations with its core democratic allies in Europe and Asia (which it hopes might one day include India)—and then those with creaking global institutions. These mediate meet the needs of a broader group of countries, including most non-aligned ones, whether on development, debt relief, security or finance.

That presents three challenges. First, Western unity must hold. Yet that is not a given. During his recent visit to China Emmanuel Macron, France's president, said that Europe's states should not become "followers" of American policy on Taiwan, nor "adapt to the American rhythm".

The second is that China can undermine global institutions by, for instance, opting for bilateral debt relief rather than fully participating in co-ordinated efforts. Chinese creditors' obstinacy at the imf is hampering what flexibility it can offer to countries struggling with debt.

The final challenge concerns the mistrust of the West that is fed by its broken promises. Take climate finance, for example. In 2009 rich countries said they would channel $100bn to poorer ones per year by 2020; the annual total has never been higher than $85bn.

By drawing on their liberal values and shared history, America and its allies were able to rally behind Ukraine. They have shown newfound resolve against authoritarian China, too. The risk is that this coming together deepens the estrangement of the global south from the international order. It would be a tragic result if, in uniting the West, America alienates the rest.” [1]

·  ·  ·1.  "How to survive a superpower split." The Economist, 15 Apr. 2023, p. NA.

 

2023 m. balandžio 14 d., penktadienis

Kodėl Vakarai negali laimėti likusios žmonijos dalies palankumo?


"Pasaulis tapo įprastas apibūdinti, kaip padalintas tarp atgaivinto Vakarų bloko ir autokratinės Kinijos bei Rusijos sąjungos. Tačiau toks mąstymas turi savo apribojimų. Pirmiausia Vakarai ne visada yra vieningi, kaip Emmanuelio Macrono kelionė į Kiniją demonstruoja. 

 

Ir, kas dar labiau stebina didžiąsias XXI amžiaus geopolitines varžybas, mažiausiai 4 milijardai žmonių arba daugiau, nei pusė pasaulio gyventojų gyvena daugiau, nei 100 šalių, kurios nenori rinktis vienos pusės.

 

     Kaip paaiškiname, šios „neprisijungusios“ šalys kartu tampa vis svarbesnės, nes susiskaido pasaulinė tvarka. Tokios valstybės, kaip Indija ir Saudo Arabija susitaria dėl atskirties ir nori turėti daugiau įtakos pasaulio reikalams. Nesuklyskite: ši pasaulio pusė taip išsibarsčiusi, kad niekada neveiks, kaip blokas. Bet jei norite suprasti, kodėl naftos kaina pakilo daugiau, nei 80 dolerių, kaip pertvarkomos tiekimo grandinės, ar taikos Ukrainoje perspektyvas, neprisijungusios šalys yra vis didesnė lygties dalis. Jų kilimas taip pat kelia didelį klausimą: Kinijai ir Vakarams varžantis dėl įtakos šioms šalims, kas nugalės?

 

     Neprisijungimo istorija yra abejotina. Jis prasidėjo XX a. šeštajame dešimtmetyje, kaip besivystančių valstybių aljansas, kurie troško įgyvendinti savo naujai įgytą suverenitetą, didėjant įtampai tarp Amerikos ir Sovietų Sąjungos. Bėgant dešimtmečiams judėjimas išsigimė į grandiozinį ir antiamerikietiškumą. Neturėdamas sanglaudos, karinės įtakos, nuolatinės narystės JT Saugumo taryboje, ekonominio pakilimo ar buvimo technologijų ir finansų avangarde, jis turėjo mažai galios. 1956 m. Johnas Fosteris Dullesas, Amerikos valstybės sekretorius, neprisijungimą pavadino „amoraliu“. Šaltojo karo pabaigoje tai buvo nereikšminga.

 

     Iš pirmo žvilgsnio šiandieninės 100 ir daugiau tariamai neutralių šalių vis dar susiduria su daugybe tų pačių problemų, kaip ir neprisijungęs judėjimas XX amžiuje. Jie turi per mažai bendro, kad būtų tokie darnūs, kaip Vakarai ar net Kinijos ir Rusijos aljansas: tokios didžiulės demokratijos, kaip Brazilija ir Indija turi nedaug bendrų interesų, jau nekalbant apie bendrą darbotvarkę su tokia monarchija, kurioje gausu pinigų, kaip Kataras. Jie vis dar pasikliauja Vakarais, Kinija ir Rusija dėl technologijų, nuo puslaidininkių iki ginklų, ir didžiąją dalį savo prekybos išrašo doleriais.

 

     Tačiau klaidinga nuvertinti jų vaidmenį dėl dviejų priežasčių. Pirma, jų ekonominė įtaka auga. 

 

Apsvarstykite 25 didžiausias neprisijungusias ekonomiką arba „sandorių-25“ (apibrėžiamos kaip tos, kurios neįvedė sankcijų Rusijai arba yra pareiškusios, kad nori būti neutralios Kinijos ir Amerikos konkurse). 

 

Kartu jie sudaro 45 % pasaulio gyventojų, o jų dalis pasaulio BVP išaugo nuo 11 %, kai griuvo Berlyno siena, iki 18 % šiandien, daugiau, nei es. Po dešimtmečius trukusios laisvosios globalizacijos jų bendras prekybos modelis yra daugiapolis – Vakarų, Kinijos ir kitų neprisijungusių valstybių pasidalijimas yra tripusis.

 

     Antra, jų požiūris į pasaulį, suformuotas nacionalinio vystymosi troškimo, tapo negailestingai pragmatiškas. Jie tapo mažai tikėtinais globalizacijos gynėjais: nuo Meksikos iki Indonezijos jie nori laisvai prekiauti su abiem geopolitinės atskirties pusėmis, kartu pasinaudodami galimybėmis pasipelnyti, nes tiekimo grandinės pertvarkomos nuo pernelyg didelės priklausomybės nuo Kinijos. Pragmatizmas taip pat reiškia, kad jie turi ribotą pasitikėjimą po 1945 m. Amerikos vadovaujamos tvarkos institucijomis, tokiomis kaip UN arba imf, kurios, jų nuomone, yra sutrikusios ir sunykusios.

 

     Vakarų raginimai ginti liberalią tvarką ar žmogaus teises dažnai vertinami, kaip savanaudiški, nenuoseklūs ir veidmainiški.

 

     Rezultatas yra sklandus, sandorinis požiūris į pasaulį, kai šalys važiuoja ir susitaria, bandydamos įgyti pranašumą. Nepriklausantys dažnai veikia vieni, bet kartais dirba kartu. OPEC, naftos kartelis, yra ryžtingesnis; šį mėnesį, nepaisant Vakarų skundų, gamyba sumažėjo 4%. 

 

Brazilijos prezidentas Luizas Inácio Lula da Silva reklamuoja „taikos klubą“, kad užbaigtų Ukrainos konfliktą.

 

 Ir Indija nori pasinaudoti savo pirmininkavimu G20 šiais metais, siekdama lobizuoti pasaulinius pietus.

 

     Galite tikėtis, kad šie eksperimentai, skirti prognozuoti galią, bus nesėkmingi, bet taps ambicingesni. Technologijų srityje Indija nori eksportuoti savo skaitmeninių paslaugų „krūvą“. Gindamasi Turkija parduoda daugiau ginklų, įskaitant bepiločius orlaivius, o Indija plečia savo laivyną. Finansų srityje trilijonų naftos dolerių reinvestavimo sistema vis mažiau orientuota į Vakarus. Atsižvelgiant į ribotą atsakomybę už istorinį anglies dvideginio išmetimą ir pažeidžiamumą dėl besikeičiančių oro sąlygų, nesusijusios šalys, suprantama, sieks daugiau įtakos klimato politikos klausimais.

 

     Net jei dauguma šalių nori vengti būti verčiamos prisijungti prie vieno ar kito geopolitinio bloko, supervalstybės vis tiek konkuruoja, kad jas laimėtų. Kinija laiko neprisijungusias šalis įtikinamomis, kaip ir Sovietų Sąjunga. Siūlo diktuoti diktatoriams ir demokratams infrastruktūrą, technologijas ir ginklus su mažais apribojimais." [1]

·  ·  · 1.  "Can the West win over the rest?" The Economist, 15 Apr. 2023, p. NA.


Why can't the West win over the rest?


"It has become common to describe the world as divided between a reinvigorated Western bloc and an autocratic alliance of China and Russia. Yet this way of thinking has its limitations. For a start, the West is not always united, as Emmanuel Macron's trip to China demonstrates. And, more strikingly for the great geopolitical contest of the 21st century, at least 4bn people, or more than half of the world's population, live in over 100 countries that do not want to pick sides.

As we explain, these "non-aligned" countries are collectively becoming more important as the global order fragments. States such as India and Saudi Arabia are making deals across the divide, and want to have more say in world affairs. Make no mistake: this half of the world is so sprawling that it will never act as a bloc. But if you want to understand why the oil price has spiked back over $80, or how supply chains are being remade, or the prospects for peace in Ukraine, non-aligned countries are a growing part of the equation. Their ascent also raises a big question: as China and the West vie for influence over these countries, who will prevail?

Non-alignment has a dubious record. It began in the 1950s as an alliance of developing states that were eager to exert their new-found sovereignty amid rising tensions between America and the Soviet Union. Over the decades the movement degenerated into grandstanding and anti-Americanism. Lacking cohesion, military clout, permanent membership of the un security council, economic heft or a presence on the frontiers of tech and finance, it had little power. In 1956 John Foster Dulles, America's secretary of state, called non-alignment "immoral". By the cold war's end, it was irrelevant.

At first glance, today's 100-plus ostensibly neutral countries still face many of the same problems as the non-aligned movement did in the 20th century. They have too little in common to be as cohesive as the West, or even the Sino-Russian alliance of convenience: huge democracies such as Brazil and India have few shared interests, let alone a common agenda with a cash-rich monarchy like Qatar. They still rely on the West, China and Russia for technologies, from semiconductors to weapons, and invoice much of their trade in greenbacks.

Yet it is a mistake to underestimate their role, for two reasons. First, their economic clout is rising. Consider the 25 largest non-aligned economies, or the "transactional-25" (defined as those which have not imposed sanctions on Russia, or have said they wish to be neutral in the Sino-American contest). Together they account for 45% of the world's population and their share of global gdp has risen from 11% when the Berlin Wall fell to 18% today, more than the eu. After decades of free-wheeling globalisation, their combined trade pattern is multipolar, with a three-way split between the West, China and other non-aligned states.

Second, their approach to the world, shaped by their desire for national development, has become ruthlessly pragmatic. They have turned into globalisation's most unlikely defenders: from Mexico to Indonesia, they want to trade freely with both sides of the geopolitical divide, while also seizing on the opportunities to profit as supply chains are restructured away from an excessive reliance on China. Pragmatism also means they have limited confidence in the institutions of the post-1945 American-led order such as the un or imf, which they see as being in a state of disorder and decay. 

Western appeals to defend the liberal order or human rights are often seen as being self-serving, inconsistent and hypocritical.

The result is a fluid, transactional approach to the world, as countries wheel and deal in an attempt to gain advantage. The non-aligned often act alone, but sometimes work in concert. opec, the oil cartel, is being more assertive; this month it cut production by 4% despite Western complaints. Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, Brazil's president, is promoting a "peace club" to end the Ukraine conflict. And India wants to use its presidency of the G20 this year to lobby for the global south.

You can expect these experiments at projecting power to be hit-and-miss—but to grow more ambitious. In tech, India wants to export its "stack" of digital services. In defence, Turkey is selling more arms, including drones and India is expanding its navy. In finance, the system for reinvesting trillions of petrodollars is becoming less centred on the West. Given their limited responsibility for historic carbon emissions and their vulnerability to changing weather, non-aligned countries will understandably seek more say over climate policy.

Even as most countries wish to avoid being forced to join one geopolitical bloc or the other, the superpowers are nonetheless competing to win them over. China sees non-aligned countries as biddable, much as the Soviet Union did. It offers dictators and democrats infrastructure, tech and arms with few strings attached.” [1]

·  ·  · 1.  "Can the West win over the rest?" The Economist, 15 Apr. 2023, p. NA.